Chile miners trapped for 17 days are still alive

Note passed through hole confirms survival of 33 Chileans

SANTIAGO, Chile - The 33 miners who have been trapped for 17 days in a copper mine in Chile's Atacama Desert are alive, President Sebastian Pinera confirmed Sunday.

The miners were found together, rescue workers said, after the workers passed a note reading, "Here are 33 people. We are all alive," through a small hole drilled by rescuers.

Pinera expressed his joy at the news.

"It came out of the depths of the mine. It said that we are alive, we are together and we hope that we will again see the sunlight and be able to hug our families," he said.

As the news of the miners' survival reached the surface, family members applauded, cried and fell into each others' arms with joy.

Many dubbed the news a miracle.

"Today all of Chile is crying with joy and emotion," Pinera said.

The workers have been trapped 2,297 feet underground since Aug. 5 in a mine in San Jose de Copiapo, about 497 miles north of Santiago, after the shaft they were working in collapsed.

Several further collapses frustrated rescue efforts, and authorities had last week unofficially expressed their fear that the miners may have died.

The note, written in red ink, was the first sign of life and unleashed immediate joy among the family members, friends and neighbors gathered outside the mine.

Hundreds broke into spontaneous singing of the Chilean national anthem and waved flags.

"I have never been so proud to be a Chilean as I am today," Pinera said.

Gaspar Quintana, Catholic bishop of Copiapo, called for a special Mass to thank God for the news.

All previous efforts to reach the miners, even through holes no more than an inch in diameter to provide them with food and water, had failed.

But it could still be weeks, or even months, before the miners can be safely brought to the surface because a giant boulder is blocking access to the trapped men.

However, now that their exact location is known, rescuers can begin to widen the hole into the chamber in order to provide them with food and water.

The accident, the worst of its kind in a decade in Chile, has prompted debate about working conditions for miners in small and medium-sized mining fields, which sometimes lack the necessary safety mechanisms.